The Sky Was Black On The Moon?

Yeah look i dont know about the moon landing's i dont know anymore, i was just trying to post a theory. It is plausible in the fact of the stars and
visibility.
If they first assumed stars would not be visible, and went with that story and told the Ap 11 to say that, then they could not change the story later
once they discovered stars are visible. It would show Ap11 was a lie.

As i said i did believe it was not faked, but looking into this more has been swaying me. How do you explain Blackbird and Mig 25 pilots being able to
see stars in daytime flights at high altitude?

I am not specualting i have quoted the articles and interviews and also provided links. They stated they could see stars during daytime flights at
very high altitude due to thin atmosphere etc.

I also love the fact that the jets/ planes burn less fuel than on idle at the ground at those altitudes. How good is that for fuel efficientcy. Now i
know the Jetson's secrets lol

Also why in the post landing interview did they have monitors in front of them like script screens?

I guess because we're acting on the statements of the guys who said they couldnt see the stars? Now your telling us that this isnt true, that they
never said this at all?

So...its POSSIBLE to take said pics on the moon dependant on exposure times and film speed?

Its POSSIBLE theres some confusion as to whether the guys could see them or not, I say that because most people are well aware of the fact that you
cant see much if its too bright beforehand, or youv just been dazzled etc?

Well yes Apollo astronauts have said they couldnt see stars in daytime on the surface. It's in the post landing press conference.

I am going on what high altitude pilots have saif in interviews as i posted above(couple pages back) and another opst in a Military Mig 25 forum from
comments made by an ex mig 25 pilot - again below: The first batch of pilots to be trained were Wing Commander A.J.Singh, Squadron Leaders D. Lazarus,
S.L.Sud, J.S. Grewal, besides Flight Lieutenants R.E.Ketkar and Lt B.S.Khalsa.

"When you fly at those altitudes there's a sudden change in environment. Now, you see the sky as blue, when you go to those heights the sky is dark.
You can see the stars during the day-light, you can see the curvature of the earth. Then you suddenly feel you don't belong to this earth, you don't
want to come down to land. You want to stay there. There's a distinct feeling of aloofness that you don't belong to this earth," said Air Vice
Marshal J.S.Grewal (Retd), one of the pilots of the pioneering batch, which trained in the then Soviet Union.

Master Warrant Officer (MWO) Desraj, the technical maintenance person who received training in the USSR and has served with the aircraft ever since
said that he had no words to express his feelings. He was emotional on account of the decommissioning as he had seen the aircraft right from the
beginning and had served in it.

Six of the eight MiG25s will be flown to the National Defence Academy, the Air Force Academy, AFS Kalaikunda, AFS Hindan, AFS Palam and AFS Jodhpur to
be installed and preserved as heritage pieces to inspire future officers during training. Two were lost in accidents.

the other was from an officer in the USAF that flew Blackbirds and is quite credible and not related to UFO / Conspiracy discussion. Did you see that
post as well, if not i will repost.

so i am going off that. If they could see stars in daytime flights at altitudes of 85,000ft then i dont see why astronauts in space cannot.

ok yes but we are limited due to atmospheric conditions yes? So what then about the Pilot's that saw stars? what? how do you respond to that?

I wasnt wanting to touch this topic as i had limited knowledge but when i started to look into it i found those articles. If the pilot's could see
stars in daylight at high altitude with a thinner atmosphere then how do you explain that?

FYI: For anyone interesting fantastic night for viewing Jupiter!! I was just outside with my Celestron and SR4 lense, fantastic, could see Jupiter's
moons and all. In the states if it's the same views, tonight i gonna be cracker for star gazers

ok fair enough, do you think they had time to let there eyes adjust? They had time to do plenty of other things, golf for example. If you were on the
Moon wouldn't you wanna see what the stars look like from there, it's a once in a lifetime opportunity yeah?

Also dont forget the lunar surface isnt white, it's not totally reflective, it's grey, less light reflects of grey. If light reflection was such a
big issue many of the photo's from the surface would have been way too bright for exposure wouldnt they?

The Lunar sky is black as well. As i said they didnt 5 minutes to look at the stars from th moon?

So you think not a lot of light reflects of the MOON well look at these examples.
The light source on the Moon is the sun pictures on moon are similar to daylight shots on earth HOW do you think we can see the Moon in daylight if it
did not reflect light well.

Right. So the astronauts on the moon couldn't look up and wait for the eyes to adjust? They could have used their arms to block out the glare from
the moon surface.

Why would they? I think they just looked up, did not see stars because of the glare, and then continued to explore the interesting part - the Moon. It
could take a few minutes for their eyes to adjust, too long to bother much.

The Above Top Secret Web site is a wholly owned social content community of The Above Network, LLC.

This content community relies on user-generated content from our member contributors. The opinions of our members are not those of site ownership who maintains strict editorial agnosticism and simply provides a collaborative venue for free expression.